Building lifetime and stock turnover are both key determinants in modelling building energy and carbon. However in China, aside from anecdotal claims that urban residential buildings are generally short-lived, there are no recent official statistics, and empirical data are extremely limited. We present a system dynamics model where survival analysis is used to characterise the dynamic interplay between new construction, aging, and demolition of residential buildings in urban China. The uncertainties associated with building lifetime were represented using a Weibull distribution, whose shape and scale parameters were calibrated based on official statistics on floor area up to 2006. The calibrated Weibull lifetime distribution allowed us to e...
Urban building system assumes significant environmental and ecological implications in terms of a co...
The residential sector is a substantial consumer of energy worldwide, especially in China, and there...
Knowing the size of the building stock is perhaps the most basic determinant in assessing energy use...
Building lifetime and stock turnover are both key determinants in modelling building energy and carb...
Building lifetime and stock turnover are both key determinants in modelling building energy and carb...
Building stock is a key determinant in building energy modelling and policy analysis. However, offic...
Building stock is a key determinant in building energy and China is the largest producer of CO2 emis...
China is the largest driver of growth in the global building sector. The longstanding construction b...
Knowing the size of building stock is perhaps the most basic determinant in assessing energy use in ...
China hosts a large amount of building stocks, which is nearly 50 billion square meters. Moreover, a...
Reliable and objective data regarding building stock is essential for predicting and analyzing energ...
Resource and environmental issues related to urban building systems have recently become a hot resea...
With China’s rapid urbanization process, massive and extensive construction materials are aggregated...
China, as the world’s largest energy consumer and greenhouse gas emitter, also has the largest const...
Urban residential buildings are formed, maintained and reformed by different external material and e...
Urban building system assumes significant environmental and ecological implications in terms of a co...
The residential sector is a substantial consumer of energy worldwide, especially in China, and there...
Knowing the size of the building stock is perhaps the most basic determinant in assessing energy use...
Building lifetime and stock turnover are both key determinants in modelling building energy and carb...
Building lifetime and stock turnover are both key determinants in modelling building energy and carb...
Building stock is a key determinant in building energy modelling and policy analysis. However, offic...
Building stock is a key determinant in building energy and China is the largest producer of CO2 emis...
China is the largest driver of growth in the global building sector. The longstanding construction b...
Knowing the size of building stock is perhaps the most basic determinant in assessing energy use in ...
China hosts a large amount of building stocks, which is nearly 50 billion square meters. Moreover, a...
Reliable and objective data regarding building stock is essential for predicting and analyzing energ...
Resource and environmental issues related to urban building systems have recently become a hot resea...
With China’s rapid urbanization process, massive and extensive construction materials are aggregated...
China, as the world’s largest energy consumer and greenhouse gas emitter, also has the largest const...
Urban residential buildings are formed, maintained and reformed by different external material and e...
Urban building system assumes significant environmental and ecological implications in terms of a co...
The residential sector is a substantial consumer of energy worldwide, especially in China, and there...
Knowing the size of the building stock is perhaps the most basic determinant in assessing energy use...